
QYLG: Rotation Into QQQ During The Bull Market – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pixabay)
The Nasdaq Composite notched its first close above 25,000 on May 1, 2026, signaling the bull market’s enduring strength amid tech sector dominance.[1][2] Investors increasingly rotated toward Nasdaq 100 exposure to capture growth, but many sought ways to enhance returns with income. The Global X Nasdaq 100 Covered Call & Growth ETF (QYLG) positioned itself as a compelling option, blending upside potential with premium income from options.
Decoding QYLG’s Hybrid Approach
QYLG tracked the Cboe Nasdaq-100 Half BuyWrite V2 Index by holding Nasdaq 100 stocks and selling call options on roughly half the portfolio’s value.[2] This “half covered call” strategy generated monthly distributions while allowing participation in the index’s gains up to the call strike on the covered portion. Unlike full covered call funds, it preserved more growth potential during rallies.
The fund launched in September 2020 with an expense ratio of 0.35% and managed $142 million in assets as of early May 2026.[2] Its top holdings mirrored the Nasdaq 100 leaders: NVIDIA at 8.58%, Apple at 7.32%, and Microsoft at 5.48%. Technology dominated at 54% of the portfolio, followed by communication services at 14.9%.
Performance Snapshot in the Bull Environment
Over the trailing 12 months through May 1, 2026, QYLG delivered a 20.26% total return on a net asset value basis, trailing the Nasdaq 100’s stronger 40.63% advance.[2][3] Yet it offered a trailing 12-month distribution yield of 16.41% and a distribution rate of 6.24%, appealing to yield hunters. The 30-day SEC yield stood lower at 0.30%, reflecting the options premium focus.
| Metric | QYLG | QQQ | QYLD |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-Year Return (as of May 2026) | 20.26%[2] | 40.63%[3] | 16.23%[4] |
| 5-Year Annualized | 10.19%[2] | ~17%[5] | 7.01%[4] |
| Expense Ratio | 0.35% | 0.20% | 0.60% |
| TTM Distribution Yield | 16.41% | ~0.5% | 12.07% |
QYLD, its full-covered sibling, lagged further at 16.23% over the same period, highlighting QYLG’s middle ground.[4] In a bull run, QYLG’s beta of 0.82 to the Nasdaq 100 underscored moderated volatility.
Strategic Case for Rotation
Portfolio managers rotated into Nasdaq-heavy allocations as the bull extended, driven by AI and tech innovations. QYLG suited income-oriented investors wary of pure growth bets like the Invesco QQQ Trust. Its monthly payouts had continued for five years, providing steady cash flow even as the index climbed.
With YTD gains of about 9.88% for QQQ through early May, the rally showed no signs of fatigue.[3] QYLG captured a portion of that while premiums from elevated volatility bolstered yields. Analysts noted such strategies preserved capital gains potential better than full overlays in appreciating markets.
- Enhanced income without fully sacrificing upside.
- Tech concentration aligns with bull drivers like semiconductors and cloud computing.
- Lower expense than aggressive covered call peers.
Navigating Risks in Prolonged Bulls
Covered calls capped gains if the Nasdaq surged beyond strike prices on the 50% overlay. QYLG underperformed QQQ by roughly half the index’s excess return in strong years. Concentration in tech exposed it to sector downturns, though diversification across 102 holdings mitigated some idiosyncratic risks.
Options trading added complexity, with premiums sensitive to volatility. Investors weighed the trade-off: reliable distributions versus full bull market participation. Still, for balanced portfolios, QYLG offered a resilient rotation vehicle.
As the Nasdaq bull charged forward, QYLG stood ready for those prioritizing total return with a yield kicker. Whether the rally endures or pauses, its hybrid design promised adaptability in uncertain times.